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The Police disappoint in L.A. show
06/21/2007 4:55 PM, Reuters Craig Rosen
A quarter-century ago,
nearly everything the Police did was magic. But Wednesday night
at Staples Center in Los Angeles, the band had trouble catching
that lightning in the bottle, as new arrangements of its
classic material kept the show from living up to the legend.
During much of their nearly two-hour set, singer-bassist
Sting, guitarist Andy Summers and drummer-percussionist Stewart
Copeland reinterpreted the band's catalog, toying with tempos,
varying arrangements and playing with their fans' memories.
In a recent interview, Sting claimed the motivation for
reforming the trio was "to go back, retrace those steps and
make the band better." Bad call. In his perfectionist, musical
mind, Sting may see flaws in his band's old material, but that
was the way the fans loved it and expected to hear it live.
Instead, the audience was treated to a tribute show that might
have been billed as "Sting, Summers and Copeland reinterpret
the songs of the Police."
Things started promising enough with a fairly faithful
version of "Message in a Bottle," initiated by Copeland
pounding a massive gong behind his drum kit. The 55-year-old
Sting, sort of the male Madonna, looked fit beyond his years in
a sleeveless white T-shirt and tight black trousers tucked into
combat boots. Copeland, the youngest member of the trio at 54
and the only one of the bottle blondes to allow himself to go
gray, sported a New Wave headband and spectacles, while Summers
was nattily attired in a suit, but when his face was projected
on the large video screens in the rafters, he looked all of his
64 years.
Two songs into the set, things started to go awry.
"Synchronicity II," from the band's final studio album in 1983,
was a mess. The trio rebounded with a skank-worthy rendition of
"Walking on the Moon" but stumbled again on "Don't Stand So
Close to Me," which sounded closer to the misguided 1986 remake
than the 1980 original.
What made the Police so captivating during its initial run
was how the trio managed to harness the energy of punk but
apply it to some fairly complex arrangements. While many of
their punk peers literally learned as they played, Sting,
Summers and Copeland came into the band as pros who cut their
teeth in jazz and prog-rock outfits. The reunited Police
brought all their musical expertise to Staples, but for the
most part failed to re-create that infectious energy that first
grabbed our attention. Making matters worse, Sting had trouble
hitting high notes a few times during the set, most notable on
the trio's biggest hit, "Every Breath You Take," one of several
encores.
The Police reunion tour -- which was scheduled to hit the
Honda Center in Anaheim on Thursday and stops at Dodger Stadium
on Saturday -- certainly is not an embarrassment, but it's not
enriching the band's legacy. It's just fattening up their
collective bank accounts.
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
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